Cumulus tower with flanking line (not visible), dark lowered base, anvil blowing downstream, and core of light to moderate snow precip. |
In North Carolina it was mildly warmer. Lower in both elevation and latitude, the convection was still going but precipitation was making it to the ground in liquid form. Dark clouds over Lake Norman preceded a rainbow over Charlotte.
We got some sleep in Georgia and by the time we rolled into our first launching point in Florida, on the Mosquito Lagoon, the temperature was barely kissing 45 degrees and the wind was blowing. I'd fished more comfortable weather in CT in the weeks prior, and here I was launching a kayak in North Florida on a cold windy morning.
Luckily, redfish like cold fronts.
Red drum, Sciaenops ocellatus, have been a long standing nemesis of mine. I've watched people around me catch them, I've made casts at completely unwilling monsters, and I've watched them feeding in the surf on a trip when I didn't have any fishing gear at all. I've wanted a red drum more than I've wanted a bonefish and about as much as I've wanted a tarpon or a permit. Bonefish seemed like my kind of fish, a beautiful species of varied habits that can be very difficult to catch an attains great sizes, but they remained at arm's length for years. Mosquito Lagoon, though a drastically changed and diminished fishery, was poised to break my redfish curse this day.
In retrospect, it is amazing how little time it took. We worked some very lifeless banks and then up into a little creek. I spooked out the first significant fish, a flounder, then nothing for a while. I was feeling less then confident. Then I saw it. Coppery sheen, spotted tail, wide bullish head. The first redfish I'd seen in more then a year left in a cloud of mud along with a couple others. I held off and hot a cast parallel up the bank hoping there were more I couldn't see. Another fish spooking off distracted me momentarily and I looked back up to see a large swirl on my fly. I panicked, trout set into nothing, the fish didn't even have me fly. I recast into the boil, made one strip, and had one of the most visually stunning eats I've ever had. I'm feeling butterflies in my stomach thinking about it right now. I strip set hard and the battle commenced. It wasn't long, the fish wasn't big, but I was impressed by its tenacity. The feeling that came over me when I got that fish... I hope you all have something in your life that makes you feel this way. It's an inexplicable excitement I get any time I watch a big thunderstorm, find an uncommon snake species, or catch a special fish. It's probably at it's most heightened when I catch a fish like that red. Though unremarkable as an individual of its species, I had long wanted to hold any redfish, and here I finally was with one in my hands.
The high, though, like any drug, left me wanting more. I couldn't leave it at that, I needed to catch another redfish, then preferably a few more after that and at least one much bigger one. A combination of wind and rusty kayak handling and 10wt accuracy from a winter of doing precisely not that sort of fishing put me at a disadvantage and I couldn't make magic happen again. Noah, who has already caught redfish, managed another drum species off the same bank I pulled my red: a beautiful spotted trout.
Cynoscion nebulosus |
I will be back to the Mosquito Lagoon. When? I don't know. It might be better than it is now. But I'm not that optimistic. Redfish though, are going to continue taking me to places I'd not have gone where they not there. Though I've only caught one, I'm a redfish addict. I already was before I ever set that hook.
Until next time,
Fish for the love of fish.
Fish for the love of places fish live.
Fish for you.
Thank you to my Patrons; Erin, David, John, Elizabeth, Brandon, Christopher, Shawn, Mike, Sara, Leo, and Franky for supporting this blog on Patreon.
FL is such a great fishing state. Very sad to hear Mosquito was not on for you and that there has been considerable environmental degradation. That seems the case through the state, regrettably, with the glades and surrounding outflows head of the unhappy class...
ReplyDeleteOn a positive, you still got a red, which is great, and you are just starting, so many species to come I'm sure!
This was Mosquito Lagoon on. This was much better than I expected to see. Check out the episode of the MillHouse podcast with Flip Pallot. He mentions Mosquito Lagoon briefly. Be his description, the amount of shots we got there made it a remarkably good day given how spontaneous it was.
DeleteIt is good you found your redfish. It is very bad that things are going badly for that place. With literally thousands moving to Florida every week, I wonder how to stem the turbid tide.
ReplyDeleteThere is a guide on Mosquito Lagoon--Chris Meyers--who attracted my attention with is videos. I finally got some idea of how to properly use a spinning rod from watching one of his videos (why on earth would I want to do THAT!! haha.) He has some pretty magical videos -- one where he catches a red on a three weight. But of course he wants to get people out there. This long term trend of loss is terrible.
While I was living down in Lauderdale last year, I made a trip to Chockoloskee with a friend--he was in his Hobie drive and I was in a tandem standard by myself. In the morning he caught two handsome redfish from his kayak. There were lots of those "trout" drum about too -- and their version of the blackfish (sheepshead).
chockoloskee is a different environment from Mosquito of course. I barely know anything about Florida but what I did learn was that even the vast Everglades were almost completely destroyed by the 1940s (without the efforts of Marjory Stoneman Douglas and others, there never would have been anything left of them today). Florida.Kind of like a repeat of Connecticut only 200 years later and warmer.
906 per day by some estimates. That doesn't take into consideration the number of people also leaving FL though, which seems to be a harder number to find bunker I know isn't insignificant. Comparing FL to CT isn't ideal. Lots of vastly different factors at play. CY could never get even close to as overpopulated simply because of topography and land ownership.
DeleteThe weather has been crazy and will probably get worse. Glad you caught a good Redfish. I enjoyed the rush.
ReplyDeleteTie, fish, write, conserve and photo on...
The weather got much better, actually.
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